Aita / Father
Avec Luís Pescador, Mikel Goneaga
Synopsis
Aita comes under the category ‘drama’, but the word does not suit the film; it sits somewhere between documentary, fiction and art house. It is about an old medieval house in the Basque village of Astigarraga, the caretaker who looks after it and the priest who comes to talk with him. There isn’t strictly speaking a plot, although the father in the title hints at the relationships that threaten to unravel here. There is just the doting attention paid to slowness and to the irresistible work of haunting. The shadows and the rising damp on the walls; the sounds which crescendo out of nowhere, a symphony, the rain, the odd word, the garden around the house which is also strangely a garden within it. Haunting, as we know, can also be a definition of cinema. It is haunted, it is the art form of ghosts, the screenings end up by adding their own patterns, their herbarium to the garden already defined by the clouds, leaves and marks…The storm gathers, thunder is going to clap , borne out of the combination of time and the images on the walls. We are also aware that haunting is another way of describing the simple act of living in a house. The person who lives in a house is a host, in other words a spirit, potentially a ghost.
Aita is a splendid visual poem – with extraordinary work by the DOP Jimmy Gimferrer – which reminds us what inhabiting means: to be inhabited, to become oneself “under supervision”.
